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Qatari PM: After missile salvo on US base, Qatari-Iran relations are damaged but will recover.

Qatar's Prime Minister said Tuesday that the Iranian missile attack on a U.S. base in the Gulf Arab State had damaged relations between Qatar and Iran. However, he expressed hope that they would "return to normal" at some point.

Iran fired missiles at Al Ubeid Air Base on Monday in response to the U.S. involvement in Israel's war against Iran. No one was injured after Tehran provided advance warning.

A ceasefire

Washington announced the news a few hours later.

Qatar, located just across the Gulf of Aden from Iran, is often used as a regional mediator, such as between Iran and the United States, or between Israel and Hamas during the ongoing Gaza War.

The Qatari Prime Minister, Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani said at a Doha press conference that the incident would definitely leave a scar on the relationship with Iran. However, I hope everyone will learn the lesson by then and not violate or undermine this type of neighbourhood relationship.

He said: "The partnership between Qatar, the U.S. and Iran is growing stronger... I hope that the good relationship will return to normal with Iran as soon as possible."

Al Thani said that Qatar had worked with Iran to facilitate a ceasefire at Washington's request.

He said: "We hope that the ceasefire will be maintained as agreed, and we urge the U.S. to negotiate with Iran in order to reach a diplomatic solution which Qatar has been seeking for years."

He said that Masoud Pezeshkian, the Iranian president, expressed regret to Qatar's ruling emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani in a telephone call that Tehran's intended target for retaliation against U.S. aerial strikes was a Qatari military base.

(source: Reuters)